Mozilla サポートの検索

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

詳しく学ぶ

このスレッドはアーカイブに保管されました。 必要であれば新たに質問してください。

access top frames from within nested frames

more options

I have the following simple script in ann html-document within a nested frameset:

<script type="text/javascript" language="JavaScript"> </script>

The script is activated by the "onload" function in the body. This works flawlessly in Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Safari and Opera, bit not in Firefox (latest version).

Anyone any idea how to get it working in Firefox?

I have the following simple script in ann html-document within a nested frameset: <script type="text/javascript" language="JavaScript"> <!-- function InitAct() { window.top.frames.beam.location.replace("topvar1.html"); } //--> </script> The script is activated by the "onload" function in the body. This works flawlessly in Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Safari and Opera, bit not in Firefox (latest version). Anyone any idea how to get it working in Firefox?

選ばれた解決策

Jos said

function InitAct()
  {
    window.top.frames.beam.location.replace("topvar1.html");
  }

Are you testing on the web or on disk? Firefox restricts file:/// access differently than http:// and https:// access.

Assuming on the web:

Are all the frames loading from the same origin? By origin I mean protocol + hostname.

Does Firefox post any error or security messages in either the Web Console for the tab, or in the global Browser console, when the script runs?

See:

この回答をすべて読む 👍 1

すべての返信 (3)

more options

選ばれた解決策

Jos said

function InitAct()
  {
    window.top.frames.beam.location.replace("topvar1.html");
  }

Are you testing on the web or on disk? Firefox restricts file:/// access differently than http:// and https:// access.

Assuming on the web:

Are all the frames loading from the same origin? By origin I mean protocol + hostname.

Does Firefox post any error or security messages in either the Web Console for the tab, or in the global Browser console, when the script runs?

See:

more options

Thanks very much for your answer! I was testing on disk (of course), but when I tested on the web it worked. Strange! I really don't understand why this should be like it is. But I'm glad now it works on the web.

more options

The difference is to protect against an attack scenario where one saved file (which could be from the web) reads other content in the same folder or sub-folders. The change was made around Firefox 68, as explained in the following thread (which has a workaround): https://support.mozilla.org/questions/1264596